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Playback in Visual Studio

- [Instructor] One place we will likely want to try…writing our test is inside Visual Studio itself.…To do this is pretty straightforward,…but it requires a couple of steps.…Here we are in Visual Studio with a test that we created,…and we want to try it out and run it…on an emulator or a physical device.…The first thing we want to do is make sure…we have the device or emulator we want to use…selected in the menu bar.…And so, right here we've got the Nexus 5 API 23,…and that's what I want to use,…so I'm going to leave it right there.…We also need to make sure that an APK is created,…so I'm going to go out and look at that on disk.…

I'll go out into a browser…and look under my Chapter 04_03 directory.…And under OldCars and OldCars.Android,…I'll look inside my release directory under bin.…And here we have the APKs created.…If they weren't created here, what I could do…is I could select the Android project…and click on BUILD and Deploy OldCars.Android.…Since it's already built, I don't need to do that.…Now we need to actually tell the test…

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Released

7/12/2017

Explore the latest enhancements to Xamarin included with the launch of Visual Studio 2017. Kevin Ford covers C# 7 language improvements such as local functions and binary constants, and shows how to use the Inspector to view and make UI changes in running applications. Discover how the Visual Studio Profiler can pinpoint memory leaks, and how the Test Recorder can help automate some routine testing. Plus, find out how to embed assemblies in Android and prevent others from snooping around in your code.